Opposites attract in human search for mate (Reuters)
Reuters - When it comes to choosing a mate, opposites really do attract, according to a Brazilian study that found people are subconsciously more likely to choose a partner whose genetic make-up is different to their own.
Types of NASA Satellite Images: NASA satellite images are of two basic types â visible satellite images and infrared images
Organic farming is labor intensive, compared to mechanical agriculture
CAMPWS’s Shannon agrees, predicting, “We’re going to see exponential growth in desalinization over the next few decades
Science, the effort to discover how the physical world works, can best be understood through experiments
“It’s an unbelievable situation and there is no end in sight,” he added
The attractive force of an electron is directly proportional to its distance from the atomic nucleus
This phenomenon, known as redshift, is neatly explained as a stretching of light waves by the expansion of space
In this article, we’ll find out how sunlight becomes heat, check out the different types of cookers available and how they work, see what makes solar cooking a potential lifesaver in many parts of the world and examine some of its shortcomings
So, its very pragmatic & cost-effective for a new site
(The professor uncovers this fact almost immediatelyâcryptography buffs will be disappointed in how transparently the meaning is encoded in the numbers
Conversely, to achieve a certain redshift in such a universe, the light has to travel a greater distance than it would in a uniformly expanding universe, in which case the supernova has to be farther away and therefore appear dimmer
Then, in a paper published online by Science last week (that was submitted and accepted for publication after Gal-Yam and Leonard’s paper), another pair of researchers identified two progenitor stars that disappeared in supernovae in 1993 and 2003
Looking at her feels like looking in the mirror
Penicillin: The discovery of penicillin is attributed to Sir Alexander Fleming, a biologist and pharmacologist from Scotland
Sixty-six out of one hundred, lost almost all or all of it, the first few years